Global Warming |
NOT |
In order to know if there was indeed a Global Warming Trend you have to have much more information that we have And then if you really could prove that there is a Global Warming Trend, you would still have a lot of things to try and prove: 1)is that normal 2)is that bad 3)is that caused by Human Beings |
copied from CNN.com on 23January 2003 JAY, Vermont (AP) -- The Northeast has been seized by extreme cold for more than a week now, with wind-chill readings so low that even hardy Vermonters are thinking twice about going outside. "It will take a special attitude to be out there today," said Bill Stenger, general manager of the Jay Peak ski area, where the afternoon temperature was 14 below zero. |
copied from CNN.com on 23January 2003 ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Bitingly cold weather rolled over the eastern United States Thursday, creating snowy coastlines, icy interstates and frigid conditions from Maine to Florida. The National Weather Service issued freeze warnings that extended all the way to Key West, Florida, and into south Texas, and said frigid conditions would likely linger throughout the weekend. |
copied from yahoo.com on 24January 2003 "It's snowing its absolute fanny off," said Bob Eakes, a tackle shop owner in Buxton, N.C., where 40-mph winds created a beachfront blizzard that obliterated views of the nearby Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. "It's really pretty, if you could see it." The first significant snowfall along the North Carolina coast in 13 years brought up to a foot of snow to the barrier islands, and the high winds piled it in drifts twice that deep. Dare County called in snow plows from the state because it doesn't have any of its own, and residents didn't have much luck finding snow shovels. |
947 SXUS72 KMFL 241243 CCA RERMIA RECORD EVENT REPORT... NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MIAMI FL 730 AM EST FRI JAN 24 2003 ...RECORD LOW TEMPERATURES FOR JAN 24... RECORD LOW TEMPERATURES WERE SET AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS THIS MORNING: CITY NEW RECORD PREVIOUS RECORD MIAMI 37 DEGREES 38 IN 1940 W PALM BEACH 33 DEGREES 37 IN 1960 MIAMI BEACH 38 DEGREES 42 IN 1960 HOLLYWOOD 36 DEGREES 37 IN 1987 NAPLES DROPPED TO 34 THIS MORNING TYING THE RECORD FROM 1960. |
There is NOT a Global Warming Trend! |
The Web CNN.com Winter storm paralyzes much of East Coast Weather blamed for 20 deaths from Nebraska to New Jersey Tuesday, February 18, 2003 Posted: 2:29 AM EST (0729 GMT) A far-reaching winter storm dumped a thick blanket of snow onto New York City, snarling transportation and causing gridlock throughout the city. CNN's Jamie Colby reports (February 18) CNN's Wolf Blitzer, Daran Kagan and Patty Davis report on the massive snowstorm that blocked travel across the eastern seaboard (February 17) NEW YORK (CNN) -- A deadly snowstorm pounded the mid-Atlantic and Eastern states Monday, piling up record snowfalls in some areas, shutting down airports, stranding holiday travelers and paralyzing transportation. The storm has been blamed for 20 deaths since it swept through the Midwest on Friday and moved east. U.S. government offices, closed Monday for the Presidents Day holiday, will be shut down in the nation's capital again Tuesday because of the foot and a half of snow that blanketed the Washington area. Emergency services will be operating. In Garrett County, Maryland, as many as 40 inches of snow covered the ground, the National Weather Service said. In Berkeley Springs, in the northeastern West Virginia, 37 inches had fallen by mid-afternoon, the weather service said. By day's end, more than a foot of snow was expected over much of New Jersey, southeastern Pennsylvania, northern West Virginia, Maryland, northern Delaware, southwestern Connecticut and northern Virginia. John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City was buried under 25 inches of snow between midnight Sunday and noon Monday, said Michelle Margraf, a meteorologist with the weather service in Sterling, Virginia. "That's an incredible amount; that's two inches per hour," the native Minnesotan said. "People say, 'Oh, you're used to things like this.' But [in Minnesota,] we don't usually get that much snow in one day. It usually falls over the course of a winter." The storm has affected even the meteorologists, said Margraf, 29, who slept in a weather service office Sunday night. The Sterling Fire Department ferried a number of other weather service workers to their jobs, she said. Emergency conditions Although the storm had largely abated in the Washington area by late Monday afternoon, New Yorkers were facing the prospect of more snow into Tuesday morning. In New Jersey, 2,500 workers were using 2,000 pieces of equipment to clear highways, Gov. James McGreevey said. In Baltimore, Maryland, the weather service recorded 26.6 inches of snow, surpassing the city's record snowfall of 26.5 inches in late January 1922. In nearby Anne Arundel County, officials hired 25 drivers with front-end loaders at more than $100 per hour to join forces with the county's 18 front-end loaders, said Jody Couser, director of communications for the county. They were expected to arrive on flatbed trucks by 10 p.m. Monday. Since Friday, the storm has been blamed for 20 deaths: two in Illinois, one in Nebraska, five in West Virginia, six in Missouri, one in Ohio, one in New Jersey and four in Iowa. Three of the deaths occurred Monday. In Baltimore, the weight of snow caved in the roof of the historic Baltimore and Ohio Railroad roundhouse, built in 1884. Another roof collapse, at a trade school in Edison, New Jersey, killed one man and injured four other people. Winds in Boston, Massachusetts, reached 60 mph, and hit 40 mph in nearby Providence, Rhode Island. New York City endured blizzard conditions, with 35-mph winds and heavy, blowing snow that reduced visibility to near zero. Forecasters said the city could receive up to 24 inches of snow, and the governor called out the National Guard. (Full story) The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that the slow-moving system could bring winter precipitation to some areas for two or three more days. "I am housebound. There is no point to shoveling the sidewalk ... the drifts are impossibly high and gusty," said Richard Freeman, an attorney who lives in west Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. "So, I'm home working on the computer and watching 'The Asphalt Jungle,'" he added. Travelers going nowhere A plow clears snow near the Southwest Airlines terminal at Baltimore Washington International Airport on Monday. Heavy accumulations of snow shut airports, rail lines and bus stations, and flood watches were issued from northern Arkansas and Alabama through Tennessee and eastern Kentucky, according to the NOAA. Thousands of airline passengers were stranded in Florida because their destination airports were shut down or backed up. (Full story) Greyhound bus terminals affected by the storm were closed indefinitely, spokeswoman Kim Plaskett said. The terminals were selling food at wholesale prices to passengers, coordinating with the Red Cross to provide cots and, in some cases, allowing people to sleep on the buses. At least 2,000 flight cancellations were blamed on the weather, leaving thousands of passengers curled up in airport chairs. (Full story) LaGuardia, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Baltimore-Washington International Airport and Philadelphia International Airport were closed. Washington Dulles International Airport was using only two runways. National was expected to reopen at 7 a.m. Tuesday. Baltimore-Washington International was to reopen at 6 p.m. Monday, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Service was not expected to return to normal until noon Tuesday at LaGuardia, where officials set up cots for stranded travelers; Philadelphia International Airport was to be back in business at 6 p.m. Monday. Washington was slammed by 16.2 inches of snow, the sixth-largest storm in the capital's history, and the city declared a snow emergency before snowfall had stopped late Monday afternoon. Residents of Silver Spring, Maryland, a Washington suburb, trudged through snow 25 inches deep. Freezing rain caused hazardous traveling conditions in western and central Virginia. Officials declared states of emergency in West Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia. -- CNN producer Beth Lewandowski contributed to this report © 2003 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. An AOL Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. CNN.com does not endorse external sites. |
The Web CNN.com Storm chills South, killing at least 15 Wednesday, February 26, 2003 Posted: 9:55 PM EST (0255 GMT) The Southern U.S. is digging out from a fast-moving winter storm that dumped large amounts of snow and iced up highways LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (AP) -- The third winter storm of the week coated much of the South with ice Wednesday, contributing to the deaths of 11 motorists, three immigrants crossing the brush of south Texas and a woman who froze to death in her home in Oklahoma. The huge storm, which stretched from Texas into the Northeast, left an inch-thick layer of ice on top of snow in many places, including Arkansas. It then plowed into mid-Atlantic states still recovering from the President's Day weekend blizzard. "Where's spring?" asked Katie Cunniffe, 32, a social worker from Plainsboro, New Jersey. The storm closed schools in the Washington, D.C., area. Maryland state police said traffic slowed to a crawl, but the latest storm was easier to deal with. "After the 28-inch record snow fall last week, I think we can handle 2-3 inches," spokesman Thornnie Rouse said. Since the snow and sleet started falling Sunday, six motorists have been killed in Texas and five in Arkansas. About 20 miles south of Little Rock, a state legislator driving toward home from the Capitol hit an icy patch Tuesday on Interstate 540 and crashed into a stranded driver and two passersby who had stopped to help. All three were killed. State police said no charges were expected against Rep. Johnnie Bolin, who suffered bruises to his chest when his air bag opened. "I want to extend my deepest sympathies to the families of the victims," Bolin said. "They're in our prayers as a result of a very horrifying experience." Border Patrol agents apprehended five immigrants Tuesday morning who told them they were desperately seeking aid for a friend who had become sick in the brush. Agents found the man dead of exposure. Fifteen minutes later, agents found two more bodies nearby. Highways in the Dallas-Fort Worth area were shut down early Wednesday because jackknifed tractor-trailer rigs blocked all lanes; hundreds of motorists were left stranded. At the cities' airport, airlines canceled more than three dozen flights because of freezing drizzle. Police in Enid, Oklahoma, attributed the death of an 84-year-old woman to hypothermia. Her body was found in her home Monday night. The temperature was 9 degrees outside and 21 degrees in the house. In Ponca City, Oklahoma, which had 15 inches of snow Sunday night, the cold weather and additional precipitation threatened to cripple the town. Deadly storm chills South © 2003 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. An AOL Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines. Contact us. All external sites will open in a new browser. CNN.com does not endorse external sites. |
It is now 17 January 2007 and we are up to about 60 deaths from ice storms and freezing in the United States. I don't have time to chronical all this but suffice it to say NO GLOBAL WARMING seems to be helping those that are dying via freezing!!! Where is Al Gore when you need him?? |
It is now 25 April 2007 - Wednesday The Dow just went over 13,000, first time ever. Guess Global Warming is not so bad [smile] |
It is now 25 April 2007 - Wednesday Seem there are a lot of Seal Hunting boats stuck in the Ice in the North Atlantic. Ice is bad enough and not going to melt soon so there is an internationl rescue effort to rescue these seal hunters. Now these are experinece seamen that know the North Atlantic and they never saw so much ice!! Guess Global Warm is not so bad afterall. [grin] |
It is now December of 2007 and there is ICE covering so many states that a million homes are without power and 15 to 20 people have died in the Ice. Where is Al Gore when you need him? [grin] And to think that this phony got the nobel prize, what for, lies about Global Warming???? Gee, I hope Al's Global Warming gets here before we all freeze to death!!! |
Edited:17 January 2007 @ 05:12pmMST Last Edited: 25 April 2007 - by Wendell |